It is currently Sun Dec 10, 2023 1:28 am


  • You do not have permission to post in chat.
@ Jeff L « Sat 10:41:23 pm »
Kudos to CPKC
@ Jeff L « Sat 10:40:34 pm »
What a party. Had a WOOOO! time.
@ ~Z~ « Sat 7:16:46 pm »
my bro and sis-in-law headed to huckleberry, and stopped in Ashley on the way there, saw PM1225 going woot woot
@ ~Z~ « Sat 7:16:21 pm »
Glad you got some biking in, minus the rain
@ AARR « Sat 3:55:34 pm »
34-35 miles biked. Got caught in the rain the last 3-4 miles. Poured the last mile.
@ J T « Sat 2:42:33 pm »
AARR wrote:Nature can adapt.
Just as it has for billions of years.
@ Saturnalia « Sat 12:37:19 pm »
SD80MAC wrote: Not a fan of swimming in the ocean. Salt water, and I just assume everywhere has sharks or something else that wants to eat me
It’s the jellyfish that worry me
@ SD80MAC « Sat 12:26:39 pm »
Australia isn’t a real place
@ DaveO « Sat 12:04:49 pm »
SD80MAC wrote: Not a fan of swimming in the ocean. Salt water, and I just assume everywhere has sharks or something else that wants to eat me
stay away from Australia. stingers won’t eat you but just kill you. salt water crocs kill and eat. sharks are your least concern😮
@ ~Z~ « Sat 11:55:22 am »
nature doesn't usually adapt that quickly though. If the temps keep rising, I wouldn't doubt that a bull shark could live in lake Michigan in future years. Far sooner than their natural adaptation.
@ Jeff L « Sat 10:46:12 am »
Live from KCUS. All day Xmas party
@ AARR « Sat 10:42:06 am »
I’m not convinced. Nature can adapt.
@ AARR « Sat 10:40:52 am »
Bull sharks couldn’t really deal with the winter temperatures in the Great Lakes, or the scarcity of food, but it’s possible that if one swam in, it could live for a while,” said Amber Peters, an assistant professor specializing in marine ecology in Michigan State’s Department of Fisheries and Wildlife.”
@ AARR « Sat 10:34:23 am »
When I was swimming in Lake Michigan last September around the Petoskey Pier before sunrise I was thinking that Bull Sharks, who are very dangerous to humans, can live in fresh water and if one were to get in the Great Lakes it could probably survive and with my luck I would become the first Great Lake shark attack victim
@ SD80MAC « Sat 10:30:42 am »
Not a fan of swimming in the ocean. Salt water, and I just assume everywhere has sharks or something else that wants to eat me

Who is chatting

Who is online

In total there are 334 users online :: 5 registered, 0 hidden and 329 guests (based on users active over the past 10 minutes)
Most users ever online was 1355 on Wed Sep 30, 2020 11:25 pm

Statistics

Total posts 519839 • Total topics 37326 • Total members 3623 • Our newest member Michiganrailfan123